Borders Launches E-Bookstore, Android and BlackBerry Apps

Borders launched its own e-bookstore July 7, part of a wider effort to penetrate the e-reader market that includes BlackBerry and Android apps. The Kobo e-reader, marketed on Borders' Website, aims to compete against Amazon's Kindle and Barnes & Noble's Nook in the increasingly competitive e-reader space.

Borders launched its own e-bookstore July 7, determined to seize a
portion of the burgeoning e-reader market. According to the company, the
e-bookstore will come stocked at the outset with 1.5 million volumes in a variety
of formats; users will be able to access those ebooks through not only the Kobo
e-reader marketed through Borders, but also BlackBerry and Android apps
downloadable from the company's Website.
In a press release, Borders officials stated they want 17 percent
of the ebook market by July 2011. Part of that strategy evidently involves the
BlackBerry and Android apps, which facilitate ebook purchases, offline reading,
access to the user's ebook library, and search by title, author, topic or
keyword. It also involves the Kobo e-reader, which Borders
currently retails for $150 through its Website.

"The race to emerge as a retail leader within the digital category is just
starting," Mike Edwards, CEO of Borders,
wrote in a July 7 statement accompanying the press release. "During the past
several months, we've been carefully crafting a digital strategy, one that has
great content and a device-neutral philosophy backed by the Borders brand as
its cornerstones. We believe we are very well-positioned to come out strong and
to ultimately claim about a 17 percent ebook market share by this time next
year."

But Borders also confronts a hotly contested space. Amazon.com, Barnes &
Noble and Sony have all been engaged in a cost-cutting war that has seen the
prices of their respective e-readers drop precipitously over the past few
weeks, starting when Barnes & Noble reduced its Nook device from $259 to
$199, and offered a WiFi-only version for $149. Amazon followed that move by
announcing its original Kindle would be reduced from $259 to $199, and
then later introduced a cheaper version of its large-screen Kindle DX with
improvements to the e-ink screen.
Sony then joined the game, dropping prices of three of its e-readers: The
Sony Reader Pocket Edition now retails for $149, the new Daily Edition for
$299, and the Touch Edition for $169.
Both Barnes & Noble and Amazon have been updating the features of their
respective devices, with software updates adding everything from Google
Android-based games to social-networking functionality. The Nook and Kindle,
along with the Kobo and devices from smaller manufacturers, all face a
challenge from Apple's iPad, which includes a full-color e-reader application.
During Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference in June, CEO
Steve Jobs indicated that some 5 million ebooks had been downloaded through the
company's iBookstore.
In the battle against Apple and each other, though, there apparently exists
a limit to how far these manufacturers can drop their devices' prices. "With
zero profits on their hardware ... these companies now hope to make their
money in this market through the sale of books," William Kidd, director and
principal analyst of financial services for iSuppli, wrote in a June 24
statement following the start of the e-reader price war. "This is the same
-razor/razor blade business model successfully employed in the video game
business ... where hardware is sold at a loss and profits are made on sales
of content."

Nicholas Kolakowski is a staff editor at eWEEK, covering Microsoft and other companies in the enterprise space, as well as evolving technology such as tablet PCs. His work has appeared in The Washington Post, Playboy, WebMD, AARP the Magazine, AutoWeek, Washington City Paper, Trader Monthly, and Private Air. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.